AARP AND OBAMA LIED: The TAX HIKES ON SENIORS IS STARTING!!!
WASHINGTON (AP) - Seniors enrolled in seven of the 10 most popular Medicare prescription drug plans will be hit with double-digit premium hikes next year if they don't shop for a better deal, says a private firm that analyzes the highly competitive market.
Medicare's open enrollment season starts Oct. 15, and beneficiaries have a wide variety of choices of taxpayer-subsidized private prescription plans. Seniors and family members can use the online Medicare Plan Finder to input individual prescription lists and find plans in their area that cover them.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Seniors enrolled in seven of the 10 most popular Medicare prescription drug plans will be hit with double-digit premium hikes next year if they don't shop for a better deal, says a private firm that analyzes the highly competitive market.
The report Monday by Avalere
Health is a reality check on the Obama's administration's upbeat
pronouncements. Back in August, officials had announced that the average
premium for basicprescription drug coverage will stay the same in 2013,
at $30 a month.
The administration's number is
accurate as an overall indicator for the entire market, but not very
helpful to consumers individually since it doesn't reflect price swings
in the real world.
"The average senior is going to
benefit by carefully scrutinizing their situation, because every year
the market changes," Avalere President Dan Mendelson said. Avalere
crunched the numbers based on bid documents that the plans submitted
to Medicare.
The report found premium
increases for all top 10 prescription drug plans, known as PDPs.
However, the most popular plan — AARP MedicareRx Preferred — is only
going up 57 cents per month nationally, to $40.42 from the current
$39.85.
The seven plans with double-digit
premium increases were: the Humana Walmart-Preferred Rx Plan (23
percent); First Health Part D Premier (18 percent); First Health Part D
Value Plus (17 percent); Cigna Medicare Rx Plan One (15 percent);
Express Scripts Medicare-Value (13 percent); the HealthSpring
Prescription Drug Plan (12 percent); and Humana Enhanced (11 percent).
Another two plans in the top 10
also had single-digit increases. They were the SilverScript Basic (8
percent) and WellCare Classic (3 percent).
On the plus side for consumers, a
new low-cost plan entered the market. Premiums for the AARP
MedicareRx Saver Plus Plan will average $15 a month nationally, although
it won't be available everywhere. That's $3.50 less than the current
low-cost leader, the Humana Walmart plan, whose premiums are rising to
$18.50.
The new AARP plan is run by
UnitedHealth Group Inc., the nation's largest health insurance company.
United pays AARP for the right to use its name on a range of Medicare
insurance products, a successful business strategy that has proven
lucrative for both partners. When Humana and Walmartteamed up to offer
their low-cost plan in 2011, United felt the competition.
"There is a real focus on the
premium in this market," Mendelson said. "If a plan fields an offering
with a low premium, it knows it can capture a significant number of
customers."
Medicare spokesman Brian Cook did not dispute the Avalere estimates.
"We continue to encourage seniors to shop around and find the plan that
works best for them," he said.Medicare's open enrollment season starts Oct. 15, and beneficiaries have a wide variety of choices of taxpayer-subsidized private prescription plans. Seniors and family members can use the online Medicare Plan Finder to input individual prescription lists and find plans in their area that cover them.
About 90 percent of Medicare's
nearly 50 million beneficiaries have some form of drug coverage, with
more than 17 million enrolled in private plans through the prescription
drug program.
President Barack Obama's 2010
health care law is improving prescription drug plans by gradually
closing the coverage gap known as the doughnut hole for those with high
prescription drug costs.
The Avalare numbers did have one silver lining for the Obama
administration. When the projections are tweaked to account for seniors
switching to lower-cost coverage, premiums for 2013 are likely to remain
steady.
Separately, the administration
recently announced that average premiums for Medicare Advantage
insurance plans will barely inch up next year on average, while
enrollment in the private medical plans will continue to rise. Many
Medicare Advantage plans also combine prescription drug coverage in one
package deal.
But the biggest premium
announcement is yet to come. Virtually all seniors pay the Part B
premium for outpatient care, including those with traditional Medicare
as well as those in private plans. Currently $99.90 a month, the Part B
premium it is expected to rise next year by less than $10.
1 comment:
so AARP gets it's rewards for donating to and supporting Obama through two campaigns.
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